A Peer-Delivered High School Preparatory Intervention for Students With ADHD
- Conditions
- ADHD
- Registration Number
- NCT04571320
- Lead Sponsor
- Seattle Children's Hospital
- Brief Summary
This study will test whether a peer-delivered intervention for high school students with ADHD outperforms enhanced school services as usual. Ninth grade students with ADHD (N=72) will be randomly assigned to the intervention (summer STRIPES) or the enhanced school services control group (SSU plus). Students will be assessed in the spring of 8th grade, fall of ninth grade, and spring of ninth grade. Primary outcomes will be GPA, Class Attendance, Disciplinary Incidents, and ADHD symptoms (parent and teacher report).
- Detailed Description
The proposed study will adapt and test a low resource school-based intervention to prepare students with ADHD for the transition to high school-a point of vulnerability for youth with ADHD. The resulting intervention will be delivered as a peer-delivered orientation to high school (1-2 weeks for 4 hours a day) with weekly peer-delivered support during the first 16 weeks of the ninth grade year. Intervention development will involve scaling down an intensive Summer Treatment Program for adolescents with ADHD, using its core components (i.e., daily skills training and repetition, parent coaching in contingency management, engaging recreational activities) to bolster a promising peer-delivered school-based intervention for ninth graders with ADHD. The resulting intervention (summer STRIPES) will target three mechanisms that are critical markers of high school success: (a) intrinsic motivation, (b) extrinsic motivation, and (c) executive functions (EFs). Y01, will use a stakeholder informed process to iteratively adapt the intervention with input from two partnering high schools (i.e., administrators, counselors, teachers, parents, students) and content experts (Sibley, Langberg, Sasser, Aaronson). Two manuals that are individualized for each school will emerge. A total of 72 rising ninth grade students with ADHD will be recruited in Y02 and Y03 (36 per year; 18 per school) from two high schools randomly assigned (within school) to receive summer STRIPES or enhanced school services as usual (SSU plus). A school staff summer STRIPES sponsor at each school will oversee training and supervision peer interventionists with support from investigators. Peer interventionists will receive a three-day training and weekly supervision. Study assessments will occur at baseline and three follow-up points throughout the ninth grade year. To test the intervention's preliminary effectiveness, the study will examine treatment effects on GPA, class attendance, and disciplinary incidents. Preliminary effectiveness will also be measured through indices of engagement (parent, adolescent, peer attendance, ratings of satisfaction, perceived utility, and therapeutic alliance) and school fit (treatment fidelity, peer attitudes toward treatment). To detect whether therapeutic mechanisms (intrinsic motivation, extrinsic motivation, EFs) are engaged by summer STRIPES, the investigators will test for group differences on multi-method indices of these mechanisms, as well as the extent to which hypothesized mechanisms affect meaningful change on study outcomes. This project represents the first attempt to utilize a peer-delivered model for ADHD intervention in a high school orientation context. If summer STRIPES participants show meaningful improvements in functioning and engagement and school fit are strong, an R01 will be planned to fully evaluate the effectiveness of this approach. To inform this future trial, attention will be given to developing an optimal measurement battery, treatment delivery model, and recruitment strategy for rising ninth graders.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 72
- Meet Symptom and Impairment Criteria for DSM-5 ADHD
- Attending ninth grade at a participating school
- Placement in special education classes
- IQ < 70
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Class Attendance Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year Number of Class Absences per Academic Quarter
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Symptom Severity Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year Parent and Teacher Rated ADHD Symptoms on DSM-5 ADHD Checklist, 0=minimum, 3=maximum, Higher score means worse outcome
Grade Point Average Change from Baseline to End of 9th grade, an average of 1 year Quarterly Student Grade Point Average from Report Cards
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Seattle Children's Hospital Research Institute
🇺🇸Seattle, Washington, United States
Seattle Children's Hospital Research Institute🇺🇸Seattle, Washington, United StatesMargaret H Sibely, PhDContact206-884-1424margaret.sibley@seattlechildrens.org